Samson and Pandey excluded from Vijay Hazare Trophy squads

Samson’s exclusion comes after KCA decided to include players from the camp

Shashank Kishore18-Dec-2024Sanju Samson has been left out of Kerala’s squad for the Vijay Hazare Trophy beginning December 21. The move comes on the back of an internal decision to include only those players who participated in a preparatory camp in the lead-up to the tournament.Samson had led Kerala in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (SMAT) 2024-25, where they narrowly missed out on qualifying for the knockouts, winning four out of their six matches. Samson, who had originally been named in the 30-member probable list, now finds himself out of the 19-member long list.ESPNcricinfo understands Samson had written to the association stating his unavailability for the camp, but the KCA has decided to stick to its original decision. With senior batter Sachin Baby also unavailable due to injury he picked up during SMAT, batter Salman Nizar has been named captain for the 50-over competition.Related

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Samson, fresh off two T20I centuries on the tour of South Africa, played in five of Kerala’s six games at SMAT, scoring 135 runs including one half-century.Kerala squad: Salman Nizar (capt), Rohan Kunnummal, Shoun Roger, Mohammed Azharuddeen (wk), Anand Krishnan, Krishna Prasad, Jalaj Saxena, Aditya Sarwate, Sijomon Joseph, Basil Thampi, Basil NP, Nidheesh MD, Eden Apple Tom, Sharafuddeen, Akhil Scaria, Vishweshwar Suresh, Vaishak Chandran, Ajnas M (wk)

Karnataka ‘move on’ from Manish Pandey

Meanwhile, there’s churn elsewhere with Karnataka seemingly having “moved on” – as per KSCA selection committee chair J Abhiram – from a number of senior players in a bid to reset. Among those not considered is senior batter Manish Pandey.The KSCA believes Pandey’s exit at this point is purely on form and the possibility of a comeback seems “tough.” Pandey managed just 117 runs in five innings as Karnataka failed to make the SMAT knockouts; they finished fourth in the eight-team pool, losing out to Baroda and Saurashtra.The last of Karnataka’s white-ball trophies – Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy in 2018-19 and 2019-20 – came under Manish Pandey’s captaincy•MPCA

The association has also gone to the extent of saying Pandey, who was vice-captain to Mayank Agarwal for the first half of Ranji Trophy 2024-25, won’t be considered for the back end of the competition that will resume in January. Pandey managed a solitary half-century in six innings, with Karnataka needing a miracle to qualify for the knockouts.”We as an association have realised that we need to move on from the players of old and bring in new blood,” Abhiram said. “We cannot live in past glory.”If Pandey has indeed played his last game, it marks the end of a glorious career in which he was part of two Ranji Trophy-winning squads [2013-14 and 2014-15], apart from winning a number of white-ball championships. Interestingly, Karnataka won their most-recent silverware under his leadership – the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy back-to-back in 2018-19 and 2019-20.Pandey has 7973 runs in 118 first-class matches at an average of 50.78, with 25 centuries. Overall, he also has over 13,000 runs across the white-ball formats. He played the most-recent of his 68 white-ball games for India in 2021. Last month, he was re-signed by reigning IPL champions Kolkata Knight Riders ahead of the 2025 season.Pandey’s ouster from Karnataka comes hot on the heels of a number of high-profile exits. K Gowtham, the allrounder, hasn’t been considered across formats since the end of the 2022-23 season despite compelling performances in club cricket as well as the state-run Maharaja T20 Trophy.R Samarth, the opener, has moved to Uttarakhand to play across formats, something he wasn’t able to at Karnataka with the selectors considering him as a red-ball specialist. Shreyas Gopal, the legspinner, left for Kerala for a season but has since returned to the Karnataka fold.It appears now that senior players, including captain Agarwal, will be under close scrutiny from the selection committee should they continue to flounder. “When we won the double-treble, it was a young Karnataka team,” Abhiram said. “We’re banking on youth once again to get us there.”Karnataka squad: Mayank Agarwal (capt), Shreyas Gopal (vice-capt), S Nikin Jose, KV Aneesh, R Smaran, KL Shrijith, Abhinav Manohar, Hardik Raj, Vyshak Vijaykumar, Vasuki Koushik, Vidyadhar Patil, Kishan Bedare, Abhilash Shetty, Manoj Bhandage, Pravin Dubey, Luvnith Sisodia

ECB secures counties agreement on Hundred 'direction of travel'

Board to continue process of opening up tournament to private investment

Matt Roller10-May-2024The privatisation of the Hundred has moved a step closer after the ECB achieved broad agreement with the 18 first-class counties and MCC over its proposed “direction of travel”.The English game has met regularly across the past nine months to discuss the future of the tournament. ECB chief executive Richard Gould said last month that there was “strong consensus” that the eight teams – which are currently owned by the board – should be opened up to private investment.This would be achieved by creating eight new companies and gifting 51% of the shares in them to the relevant host county: Surrey, for example, would be majority shareholders in Oval Invincibles. The remaining 49% of shares would be sold centrally by the ECB to interested parties.The board asked the counties to agree upon a “direction of travel” by Friday. ESPNcricinfo understands that while there is still some wrangling over how the proceeds from the sale of the ECB’s shares should be split, the counties have given their non-binding approval for the sale process to continue.The 11 non-host counties expressed their concerns to Gould earlier this week and are seeking independent financial advice. “The non-host county position is that, as in any financial arrangement of this type – and you’re talking hundreds of millions of pounds – that we would have our own proper, impartial advice and that’s what we’re now seeking,” Jon Filby, Sussex’s chair, told the BBC this week.But many of them are struggling financially and have business models which depend heavily on central funding from the ECB. A recent study in the Cricketer magazine found that five counties have required emergency financial help from the ECB in the last two years. Gloucestershire posted £1.2m losses last year, Middlesex are under special measures after breaching ECB financial regulations, while Worcestershire’s head of finance said in their last annual report: “Financial sustainability remains a paramount concern”.The Telegraph reported that in the latest model, money raised from selling the ECB’s stake would see 10% given to the recreational game and the rest shared by the counties. The first £275 million would be shared 19 ways – between the 18 counties and MCC. The next £150m would be shared between the 11 non-hosts, and any further proceeds shared 19 ways again.One county chief executive told ESPNcricinfo that the non-hosts – of which his club are one – are generally supportive of a deal but believe its details must be right for all parties to avoid entrenching the divide between richer and poorer counties.The host counties will decide how much of their 51% stake in the teams they wish to keep – if any – and the remainder will be sold centrally by the ECB as part of the sales process. Lancashire and Surrey have both held recent consultations with members to keep them engaged with the latest developments.The ECB has appointed Raine Group, the New York-based investment bank, to manage the sale process, which it hopes to complete later this year after using the 2024 edition as a shop window for the Hundred. IPL franchises have been sounded out, while Gould has also reported interest from investors in the US and from the UK.Additional reporting by Andrew Miller

Junaid Siddique comes back as UAE ring in the changes for T20 tri-series

Harshit Kaushik, Muhammad Farooq and Muhammad Jawadullah are the others to have come into the side for the T20Is against Afghanistan and Pakistan

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Aug-2025Muhammad Waseem will lead UAE at the upcoming triangular T20I series against Afghanistan and Pakistan at home in Sharjah from August 29 to September 7, which will be followed by the men’s T20 Asia Cup from September 9, also in the UAE.The squad of 15 – up from the 14 that played in UAE’s last engagement, the Pearl of Africa Cup in Entebbe, Uganda, where they lost the final to the hosts – has four new faces: Harshit Kaushik, Junaid Siddique, Muhammad Farooq and Muhammad Jawadullah. Out from the Pearl of Africa squad are Akif Raja, Matiullah Khan and Zuhaib Zubair.Kaushik is a 28-year-old left-hand middle-order batter who bowls part-time left-arm spin, and hasn’t made his international debut yet, while the other three have all played for UAE in the past.

UAE tri-series fixtures

Aug 29 – Afg vs Pak
Aug 30 – UAE vs Pak
Sep 1 – UAE vs Afg
Sep 2 – Afg vs Pak
Sep 4 – UAE vs Pak
Sep 5 – UAE vs Afg
Sep 7 – Final

Siddique, the 32-year-old medium pacer, has played 59 ODIs and 71 T20Is, picking up 76 and 96 wickets in the two formats respectively, and has also turned out in the ILT20 and Global T20 Canada among other leagues. Left-arm quick Jawadullah, 26, has played 12 ODIs (11 wickets) and 33 T20Is (54 wickets) and Farooq, the 32-year-old legspin-bowling allrounder, has picked up nine wickets in eight T20Is to go with two wicketless outings in ODIs.The rest of the squad wears a familiar look, with the experience of Waseem, Alishan Sharafu, Aryansh Sharma and Rahul Chopra complemented by the likes of Muhammad Zohaib, UAE’s best batter at the Pearl of Africa Cup, and Saghir Khan.UAE, coached by former India opening batter Lalchand Rajput, will play their first match of the tri-series against Pakistan on August 30, followed by games against Afghanistan (September 1), Pakistan (September 4) and Afghanistan (September 5). The final is slotted for September 7, just two days before the opening game of the Asia Cup, where UAE are grouped with India, Oman and Pakistan. The squad for that tournament will be announced soon.

UAE squad for T20I tri-series

Muhammad Waseem (capt), Alishan Sharafu, Aryansh Sharma (wk), Asif Khan, Dhruv Parashar, Ethan D’Souza, Haider Ali, Harshit Kaushik, Junaid Siddique, Muhammad Farooq, Muhammad Jawadullah, Muhammad Zohaib, Rahul Chopra (wk), Rohid Khan, Saghir Khan.

Jos Buttler targeting Lancashire's T20 Blast quarter-final for injury comeback

England white-ball captain has not featured since T20 World Cup due to calf injury

Matt Roller25-Aug-2024Jos Buttler is targeting Lancashire’s T20 Blast quarter-final at Sussex for his comeback from the calf injury which ruled him out of the Hundred.Buttler, who has not played since the T20 World Cup, has been backed to continue as England’s white-ball captain by managing director Rob Key after Matthew Mott lost his job as head coach. He will work alongside interim coach Marcus Trescothick – his former Somerset team-mate – during September’s T20I and ODI series against Australia.After sustaining a calf injury while preparing for the Hundred, Buttler has returned to training and has been working with England physio Craig de Weymarn in Bristol. “Another good session in the bank,” he wrote on Instagram this week, adding in another post: “Picking up injuries as a professional sportsman is always frustrating and I was gutted to miss the Hundred this year.”

Buttler has not featured for Lancashire this year but is in contention for their quarter-final at Hove on September 4, pending a late fitness test. Sussex, who were led to a second-placed finish in the South Group by Tymal Mills, are expected to have Jofra Archer available, who could open the bowling to his England captain.Lancashire are in a battle to avoid relegation to the County Championship’s second tier and won two out of eight games in the Metro Bank Cup, so are hoping to save their season by reaching Finals Day of the T20 Blast.”That’s looking really positive,” Dale Benkenstein, their coach, told ESPNcricinfo on Sunday. “We should have everyone fit for the quarter-finals. Jos has been doing a lot of rehab. I’ve been in contact with him and he’s very keen to play. We are happy to leave it down to the last day.”He’ll do a fitness test on the Monday, just before the game and with the England physios and everyone giving him the green light, then he’ll play. We are very keen that if he’s fit and ready to go then he’ll be playing.”Saqib Mahmood and Phil Salt were rested from Lancashire’s Championship defeat to Surrey this week but are expected to be available for the T20 quarter-final, as is Liam Livingstone. Chris Green will be at the Caribbean Premier League but Ireland’s George Dockrell will deputise for him.Saqib Mahmood was not risked at The Oval•Getty Images

Mahmood was not risked at The Oval as Lancashire look to manage his workload following two injury-ruined summers. “It was too much of a risk,” Benkenstein said. Salt missed out with “a bit of a dodgy back” and is unlikely to feature against Hampshire next week.”The four-day [competition] has been really tough for us,” Benkenstein said. “We’re still hanging in there. But the T20 was something where we didn’t think we had the best team: we were missing a lot of players and that was a real positive that we won five out of our first six games in the beginning, with a lot of guys not there.”Now we’re getting to the knockout stages, we should have our full-strength team which gives us the best chance. It is important for us. You come into a season wanting to win everything, and we’ve got a chance of winning, getting to Finals Day, and then you’re two games away. That’s what we are hoping for.”Buttler and other players named in England’s T20 squad will not be available for Finals Day on September 14, which is sandwiched between the second and third T20Is against Australia.

SA unsure on Quinton de Kock's T20I future: 'We have a glimmer of hope that sits in the background'

“Whether we see him again, time will tell,” says South Africa’s white-ball coach Rob Walter

Firdose Moonda04-Jul-2024South Africa are hopeful Quinton de Kock will remain available to play white-ball international cricket and realise his dream of winning a World Cup, as they are yet to receive news of his T20I retirement. De Kock called time on Tests in 2021 and ended his 50-over career at last year’s ODI World Cup. The T20 World Cup in West Indies and USA was expected to be his last T20I outing but national white-ball coach Rob Walter hopes there may be more to come from de Kock.”Quinny’s an enigma. He hasn’t officially called time. So we have that little glimmer of hope that sits in the background,” Walter said on arrival in South Africa on Thursday. “Quinny has very high standards for himself and has dreamed about a World Cup win for a very long time. Has had a number of knocks along the way, not least this last final, You would have seen that he was very emotional with it. Whether we see him again, time will tell.”Related

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Walter has not broached the subject with de Kock yet and will not have to for some time. South Africa’s next T20Is are in West Indies in August but de Kock is not on their national contract list and therefore not obliged to be available for those, or any other international games, but that will not compromise his selection in future.As was the case with de Kock at this World Cup, when he was picked without playing the preceding series against India in December as he was at the BBL, national availability is no longer a non-negotiable ahead of big tournaments. That means de Kock may still come into contention for the 2026 T20 World Cup as long as he remains active on the league circuit.”I’ve had no conversations with him. It wasn’t the right time after the final to have that conversation,” Walter said. “So let me leave it at saying your guess is as good as mine.”Luckily for Walter, the other likely retiree, David Miller, has left no one guessing over his future. Miller confirmed his availability for South Africa in an Instagram story when he said: “Contrary to reports, I have not retired from T20 international cricket. I will continue to be available for the Proteas. The best is yet to come.”The wording of Miller’s post suggests he will also continue playing ODIs, which is important considering there remains a question of whether de Kock would consider an ODI U-turn, with the 2027 home World Cup in mind. If so, he may come into consideration for next year’s Champions Trophy which is crucial to kicking off long-term preparations for the next ODI World Cup and presents another opportunity for South Africa to get their hands on a long-awaited trophy. Incidentally, it is the only ICC senior cup South Africa have won, in 1998.”I think people underestimate the toughness of the Champions Trophy. For me, that’s as strong a competition as any,” Walter said. “Hopefully we continue to grow as a side and just keep putting ourselves in a position where we can compete. I said last year after the 50-over World Cup, I genuinely believed that semi-final would be the catalyst to us winning our first world trophy. And nothing’s changed. We probably believe that even stronger now.”Quinton de Kock and Rishabh Pant have a chat after the final•Robert Cianflone/Getty Images

Walter identified the team’s ability to stay in the game under pressure, which has historically not been the case, as the biggest improvement in his time in charge. “We’ve progressed, no doubt about that. This last World Cup, the team won small moments which in the past, potentially, haven’t gone our way. There was huge resilience, we showed a large skill set and we encountered very different conditions from the start in New York to the back end of the competition so it showed great versatility as well. For me, the team is ever-growing. We’ve made strides, but by no means the finished article.”South Africa, as a nation, have now reached successive T20 World Cup finals thanks to their women’s and men’s team and director of cricket Enoch Nkwe called it a “massive mindset shift,” to get there.”Reaching two finals in a short period of time goes to show the buy-in, not only from the two teams, but also from a system point of view. There’s been quite a lot of work that’s been done and builds towards this moment. We’re heading in the right direction. From a women’s point of view, the eyes have always been on the 2025 Cricket World Cup. And from a men’s point of view, 2027. This will definitely go a long way and give us that belief in the system that we can actually achieve according to this system.”Currently, South Africa’s women’s team are in India, where they will play three T20Is in final preparation for the October World Cup, while the men’s team are on a break until early August, when their World Test Championship fixtures resume. Of the T20 World Cup squad, only Keshav Maharaj, Ottneil Baartman and Lungi Ngidi returned home with the rest either at the MLC or the Lanka Premier League.

Rohit on BCCI making domestic cricket mandatory: 'You hardly have any time'

Rohit heard telling chief selector Agarkar that his team-mates had expressed concerns over some of the guidelines, including the travel restrictions on families

S Sudarshanan18-Jan-20252:42

Rohit: Hardly any time for India regulars to play domestic cricket

India captain Rohit Sharma has said that it is important for players to have enough rest and stay fresh for international engagements, even as he agreed that the BCCI was right in making it mandatory for members of the national team to play domestic cricket. The guideline on domestic cricket participation was one of ten to emerge from the BCCI this week, after a review meeting – that Rohit was part of – to go over India’s recent poor run in Test cricket. Rohit was also heard to say during a press interaction in Mumbai that his team-mates had expressed some concerns over some of the guidelines, including the restrictions on families travelling with the players.Rohit was speaking at a press conference where India’s Champions Trophy squad was announced. But his comments about his team-mates’ concerns, as well as wanting to discuss them with the BCCI secretary Devjit Saikia, were directed to Ajit Agarkar, the chair of the men’s selection committee, ahead of the formal start of the press conference. Later, when asked by reporters about the need to issue such guidelines, Agarkar said they were not a “diktat” or “punishment”.Rohit, who is the first current player to talk about the guidelines, told the press conference that while he understood the BCCI’s call, there had not been much opportunity for India players to play domestic cricket of late, and none of them were taking their spots in the team for granted. “[In the] last six-seven years, if you go back and see our calendar, there hasn’t been a time where we were sitting at home for 45 days and there is cricket going on,” Rohit said. “You do get that time when you finish the IPL and if there’s nothing happening right after that. But if you see our domestic season, it starts in October – maybe September – and it gets over by February-March. And that is the time India plays a lot of [international] cricket as well. So, guys who are not playing certain formats and have time, and then there is domestic cricket happening, then they will play.Related

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“But the last six-seven years – I can at least tell about what has happened with me since I’ve started playing Test cricket regularly, which is from 2019 – you hardly have any time. When you play so much international cricket through the year, you need some time off as well as a cricketer just to refresh, get your mind right, just to be ready for the upcoming season. But we have addressed it now and nobody takes it for granted or anything like that.”Rohit, who last played a domestic first-class game in September 2016, will be playing Mumbai’s next Ranji Trophy match, against Jammu & Kashmir, next week. Among India’s Test regulars, Shubman Gill, Ravindra Jadeja and Rishabh Pant are also set to play in the next round of games.Agarkar conceded that it is difficult for players who play all formats to take part in domestic cricket but insisted that such guidelines are place to strengthen the Indian domestic system. “We’ll probably talk about it endlessly if we keep going on but I think everyone should [play domestic cricket] when available,” he said. “Sometimes, to be fair to a lot of the players, it’s difficult if you’re playing all three formats, you don’t get as much time… You’ll probably find most of the guys playing this round of Ranji Trophy. There’s been a little bit of [down] time.”And those who are available and fit, obviously, you expect people to play. I don’t think it is a diktat. It’s one of the things that BCCI has obviously put forward. As selectors, we expect people, when they’re available, to play because that can only strengthen our domestic structure. Not just for their form or their fitness and playing cricket, but it can only strengthen our domestic structure.”In its guidelines, the BCCI reiterated that not being available for domestic cricket could cost players their place in international cricket as well as impact their central contracts. The sanctions, it laid out, could also include barring them from participating in the IPL.Agarkar said while this was not “school”, certain rules still needed to be followed. “When the time permits, we expect everyone to play,” he said. “Various things you see over the last few months where you can improve as a team, where you can get a bit closer as a team. It’s not a school. It’s not a punishment.”You have some rules in place and when you’re playing for the national team you just follow those rules. Again, these are mature individuals. They are superstars in their own right in international sport. But at the end of the day, you’re eventually representing your country. There are certain things that you just inherently follow as every team does.”A lot of them have been in place. Maybe we’ve spoken about it now and it’s been put out, but a lot of them have been in place in any case. You keep on refining it as you go along. Eventually what suits the team, you want to try and do.”Although Rohit spoke about the mandatory participation in domestic cricket guideline, when asked about his take on the “new policy” for players, he replied: “Who told you about this? Has it come officially?”

Weatherald 'ready' for Test cricket, excitement around teen-prodigy Peake

Weatherald thinks he is ready for a Test call-up if it comes after posting 183 for Australia A while Peake, 18, impressed with his maturity making 92 against Sri Lanka A

Alex Malcolm24-Jul-2025Veteran Tasmania opener Jake Weatherald thinks he’s ready to go if a Test call-up comes his way for the Ashes later this year while excitement is building around eighteen-year-old Victoria batter Oliver Peake after another impressive showing in his maiden red-ball appearance for Australia A.The pair starred for Australia A alongside skipper Jason Sangha as the home side racked up 558 for 4 declared in a batting dominated draw in the second four-day match against Sri Lanka A in Darwin.Their performances will come with the obvious caveat that runs were very easy to make at Marrara Cricket Ground with Sangha posting a career-best unbeaten 202 while Weatherald also made 183 and Peake posted 92 in just his second first-class game as only ten wickets fell across four full days of cricket. Sri Lanka A batters Nuwanidu Fernando and Pavan Rathnayake also scored centuries while four other half-centuries were scored in the game.Related

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Weatherald believes he is ready to play Test cricket if called upon by the selectors for the Ashes series later this year after continuing his outstanding form across the last 12 months. Having been the leading runscorer in the Shield last year with 905 runs at an average of 50.33 with three massive centuries, he added 54 and 183 in his two innings for Australia A in this series.”If you keep making runs, of course you’re going to get noticed more – and I’ve done that,” Weatherald said on Tuesday in Darwin after his innings of 183. “Obviously there’s some great candidates there as well, and they’ve earned their right to be there.”So to be amongst them is a pretty proud moment.”But I’m batting well, and I think I’m ready to go if it comes to that moment.”Weatherald, 30, has long been one of the most talented ball-strikers in Australian domestic cricket but this is the first time he has averaged more than 41 over a 12-month stretch in his decade-long career. He said his cumulative experience is the reason for his consistent run.”Just age, getting used to what I’m doing, understanding my game, understanding what I need to do to make runs and bat [for] long periods of time,” Weatherald said.”And just being confident I can do it in any conditions, just believing that I’ve got the right method and sticking to it throughout my innings and not being taken away by the wicket or the situation.”Just being able to lock in and do my thing.”Sangha, 25, was impressed by Weatherald’s preparation and mindset after playing with him for the first time in this series.”He just looks so clear when he’s batting,” Sangha said after the match on Wednesday. “He’s obviously been a strong player and a very talented player for a long time.”He’s well renowned as a guy who really pounces on width and picks up length quite early, and it just looks like he’s made his strengths even stronger, and he’s able to rectify maybe some areas in his game that maybe would have cost him a few more dismissals.”He’s been great to share the change room with and talk about what he’s been doing the last 12 months, and how he’s been going about it. And I think for young guys like an Ollie Peake and even myself, who are always striving for that consistency, to see how diligent he is with his routines, how diligent he is with his preparation.”He just seems like he’s in a really clear space and knows his game so well, and it’s been a pleasure to watch him go about his business this week.”Oliver Peake made his mark in the 50-over and four-day games for Australia A•Getty Images

Meanwhile, there is some excitement building around Peake given he was playing just his second first-class match after making 52 on debut for Victoria in March. He also made 55 not out off 38 balls on List A debut for Australia A in the first 50-over match of Sri Lanka A’s tour in Darwin.Sangha, who himself has experienced the challenge of transitioning from being an Under-19 prodigy to becoming a consistent first-class player, marveled at how well Peake handled himself.”He played really well,” Sangha said after the match. “He’s got so much maturity for a young player, and even just talking to him out in the middle about his plans and how he was approaching his innings, he’s such an exciting talent, and he’s got a really good head on his shoulders.”I think even just off the field, just the way he sort of carries himself, credit to him.”I look back when I was 18, and I was probably nowhere near as emotionally intelligent or mature as he is.”It’s a really, really cool thing to see, and he’s obviously got some really good support around him, and such a down to earth, humble kid.”Peake’s selection for Australia A alongside a group of batters who had earned their call-up through outstanding Shield performances last summer is proof of how highly he is rated by Australia’s selectors. Peake was also taken on the recent Test tour of Sri Lanka as a development player to train with the Test squad.He looms as a likely tourist on Australia A’s tour of India later this year as Australia looks to give some younger players experience in spinning conditions with an eye towards the 2027 Test tour.

Naeem Islam fifty hands Bangladesh thrilling win

There was late drama at the Zohur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, as Naeem Islam defied all odds to steer Bangladesh to a narrow one-wicket win

Cricinfo staff05-Nov-2009
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
Naeem Islam’s heroics overshadowed what had been a virtuoso batting effort in the morning from Brendan Taylor•Associated Press

The dead rubber provided what this series has sorely lacked – a close finish. Naeem Islam was the hero for Bangladesh, conjuring a one-wicket victory with an unbeaten 73 in which he exploited the Powerplays perfectly. Naeem’s heroics overshadowed what had been a virtuoso batting effort in the morning from Brendan Taylor, whose unbeaten 118, with very little support form the rest, was the difference between a familiar Zimbabwean batting failure and a defendable total.Naeem had last man and uber-rabbit Nazmul Hossain for company, with Bangladesh still needing 35 for victory. The many singles that he turned down to remain on strike had the crowd getting restive, but Naeem had them chanting his name in joy with three consecutive sixes off Chamu Chibhabha in the 48th over to give the final twist to a topsy-turvy match. Those three deliveries turned Chibhabha from hero to zero, after he had put Zimbabwe in charge with a double-wicket maiden in the 43rd over.Bangladesh had lost wickets at key junctures of their chase. The openers failed (Tamim Iqbal retired hurt early with a hand injury, and only returned at No. 10) and Mohammad
Ashraful was run out by a brilliant bit of fielding from Stuart Matsikenyeri, who latched onto the ball quickly at short midwicket and threw down the stumps. Raqibul Hasan was extremely scratchy, and lucky to survive after plenty of swings and misses against Chris Mpofu, who was getting the ball to swing away from the right-hander. Matsikenyeri also did his bit with the ball, taking two key wickets – of Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim.The coach Jamie Siddons had talked about how the past few victorious months have taught Bangladesh how to win, and they showed that by refusing to give up in the face of several setbacks. One example of that was when their most dependable batsman, Shakib, was dismissed leaving Bangladesh stuttering at 105 for 5. The home team fought back though with a mature partnership between Naeem and Mahmudullah, the pair adding 69 patient runs with both batsmen abandoning the flashy shots that has cost Bangladesh dear on so many occasions.There would have been no need for the nail-biting and tensions had Taylor been dismissed cheaply in the morning. His maiden international century had bailed Zimbabwe’s fragile batting from yet another embarrassing display, but it all amounted to nothing. Bangladesh’s spinners proved too crafty for most of the visitors’ batsmen again, and Zimbabwe were reduced to 113 for 7 in the 29th over. However, Zimbabwe’s lower order showed more spine than most of their specialist batsmen, and supported Taylor well to lift the total beyond 200.Bangladesh again stuck to their policy of filling the side with spinners, and it again paid off as the slow bowlers took all nine wickets to fall. Abdur Razzak has regularly picked up wickets with the new ball, and today was no different as he left Zimbabwe at 18 for 2 in the eighth over.Elton Chigumbura dominated a stabilising 62-run stand with Taylor, smashing six fours in a run-a-ball 38 before being foxed by a quicker one from offspinner Mahmudullah. Things got worse for Zimbabwe two deliveries later when another quicker one fooled Malcolm Waller.
Taylor could only watch in frustration as three more wickets went down quickly. Later, Shakib bagged two wickets in three balls, of Forster Mutizwa and Chamu Chibhabha, in the 29th over.Taylor had quietly moved along to 65, with only 22 runs in boundaries, but steadily pushed Zimbabwe to 181 for 8 by the end of 45 overs with the help of Ray Price. He launched an assault in the final over, ransacking 19 runs to dent Mahmudullah’s figures.

'I've been fit since January' – Hardik confirms he will bowl in IPL 2024

MI captain says he hasn’t met with his predecessor Rohit Sharma yet but foresees no issues

Yash Jha18-Mar-2024Hardik Pandya has declared himself fit to bowl as he returns to captain Mumbai Indians in IPL 2024. The allrounder said he has been fit since the start of this year, after suffering an ankle injury during the 2023 ODI World Cup that ruled him out of all cricket since October.”Yes, I will be bowling,” Hardik said at a pre-season press conference in Mumbai on Monday. “My injury in [the] World Cup was a freak injury. It had nothing to do with my past injuries, it had nothing to do with my fitness. When I got fit, the Afghanistan [T20I] series had just started [in January]. I’ve been fit since then, but there were no games to play.”Hardik had injured his ankle in his follow-through while bowling during India’s World Cup league match against Bangladesh in Pune. He said that his attempts to recover in time for the knockout stages had aggravated the injury.”My injury, from day one, showed that I’m going to be out of the World Cup, but playing for India has always been special, especially in a World Cup. [So] we pushed [for] ten days – we knew that it’s an uphill task to be fit for the World Cup semi-finals or finals,” he said. “When we pushed, I kind of triggered my injury [further], and the injury became a little longer.”Related

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Hardik: ‘I know that Rohit will always have a hand on my shoulder’

Hardik’s return to Mumbai as captain, replacing Rohit Sharma who had led the team since 2013, is one of the biggest talking points of this IPL season.”I don’t think it will be awkward, or anything different, it will be a nice feeling because we’ve been playing [together] for ten years,” Hardik said of his relationship with Rohit and the new team dynamic. “I’ve played my whole career under him, and I know he’s going to have a hand on my shoulder always.”He’s been traveling, he’s been playing. It’s been a couple of months since we’ve seen each other. Once he comes [and joins the MI camp], we’ll definitely have a chat.”The Mumbai coach Mark Boucher said that Rohit freed from the responsibility of captaincy could be key for the team. “I think Rohit’s in fantastic form. I’ve been watching the games against England and the way that he’s hitting the ball, his movements into the ball are fantastic,” Boucher said. “So I’m really looking forward to Rohit going out and really expressing himself, without the captaincy on his shoulders.”Rohit has had a tough time with the bat in recent IPL seasons, averaging 24.89 and going at a strike rate of 127.54 in 70 innings across the last five years. “If he has a great season for us, we’re going to be in the dying stages of the tournament,” Boucher said.IPL 2023 was Boucher’s first season as head coach after replacing Mahela Jayawardene, and Mumbai finished fourth in the league stage before crashing out in Qualifier 2 – to Hardik’s Gujarat Titans.

Will MI start with four overseas players?

Mumbai went all out for overseas quicks to partner the returning Jasprit Bumrah this season, spending INR 14.40 crore (out of a remaining purse of INR 17.75 crore) on South Africa’s Gerald Coetzee and Sri Lanka’s Dilshan Madushanka and Nuwan Thushara. They also bought Afghanistan allrounder Mohammad Nabi in addition to the pre-auction trade of West Indian Romario Shepherd.”If you have a look at all the [overseas] players we have selected, we’ve got plenty of options,” Boucher said. “I think this season we can choose conditions-related, we’ll have a look and see which players best suit different conditions.”Boucher did hint at Mumbai possibly starting with three overseas players – something they did in three games last season – given the wealth of Indian batting options available for the first XI.”There might even be situations where we only go in with three overseas players, without giving too much away, and maybe have one or two options as impact players on the bench, and have a look at the conditions and see what’s best going to suit us.”

Mandhana, bowlers help RCB cruise past Delhi Capitals

Renuka, Wareham and Bisht bowled out Capitals for 141 before Mandhana and Wyatt-Hodge made short work of the target

Vishal Dikshit17-Feb-20255:16

Experts laud Mandhana, Renuka in RCB’s dominant win

Defending champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) made short work of a full-strength Delhi Capitals by keeping their batting line-up to 141 and then chasing the total down with ease to continue the trend of the chasing side winning, for the fourth game in a row. Even though RCB were without the trio of Sophie Molineux, Shreyanka Patil and Asha Sobhana, which brought them glory in last year’s final against DC, the trio of Renuka Singh, Ekta Bisht and Georgia Wareham combined to bundle out DC to a below-par total.In reply, RCB openers Smriti Mandhana and Danni Wyatt-Hodge put on their second century stand, having earlier done so for Southern Brave in the Hundred in 2021. Mandhana scored her fastest WPL half-century, off 27 balls, and Wyatt-Hodge peppered the off side with six fours out of her seven during her 42 off 33. By the time she fell in the 11th over, RCB needed only 35 off 55 and they cruised over the line in the 17th over.

Rodrigues leads DC in the powerplay, Lanning scratchy again

Renuka landed DC the first big blow when Shafali Verma struck her first ball for the simplest of catches to mid-off for a golden duck. With Meg Lanning looking scratchy at the other end, just like she did against Shabnim Ismail two days ago, it was Jemimah Rodrigues who led DC in the powerplay. Rodrigues herself didn’t start too well – she survived a review on zero and took six balls to get off the mark – but she launched into the RCB attack at first sight of spin, gloriously lofting Ekta Bisht over the covers for a six. DC were also helped by plenty of byes and extras in the powerplay which Rodrigues combined with another six and two fours off VJ Joshitha in the sixth over to give DC their second 50-plus powerplay in as many games.Jemimah Rodrigues struck a quick 22-ball 34•BCCI

DC crumble again after the powerplay

RCB, however, made inroads through the introduction of Georgia Wareham in the seventh over. Once Rodrigues missed a reverse sweep to be stumped in a flash by Richa Ghosh for 34 off 22, DC lost Lanning as well in the next over when the captain miscued Kim Garth to Ellyse Perry at deep-backward square leg. Annabel Sutherland soon launched Bisht for a big six on the leg side to show that DC weren’t going to be bogged down by the double blow but her attacking approach handed a catch straight to cover in Renuka’s second spell. New batter Jess Jonassen miscued Bisht to midwicket five balls later and DC had suddenly slipped from 60 for 1 to 87 for 5.It could have been 95 for 6 had Kanika Ahuja not put down Marizanne Kapp at short fine leg and even 103 for 6 if the mix-up between Kapp and Sarah Bryce had not been followed by a fumble, also by Ahuja, but it did become 105 for 6 when Kapp holed out to long-off off a 69.2kph delivery from Bisht. Bryce chipped in with another useful cameo with a 23 off 19 that saw RCB past 125 but they needed a lot more to make a match out of this. Wareham handed them a double blow in the 18th over and Garth wrapped things up in the last over to finish with 2 for 19, while Renuka bagged 3 for 23 and Wareham 3 for 25.Renuka Singh picked up 3 for 23•BCCI

Mandhana, Wyatt-Hodge cruise through

Even with Kapp and Jonassen back in the XI after recovering from sickness, DC hardly posed any challenges for the RCB top order. Mandhana cashed in on the wayward lines from Kapp in the first over and turned the tide of her record against offspinners (she’s been out to them 10 times in the WPL) when she swept Minnu Mani for two fours in the third over. Wyatt-Hodge pierced the gaps square on the off side, especially against Shikha Pandey, for four fours in the powerplay.At 57 for 0 in the powerplay, RCB’s asking rate was just over six an over. Even bowling changes didn’t work for DC. Both Jonassen and Annabel Sutherland were carted for fours by both batters in their first overs, and when the reliable Rodrigues dropped Wyatt-Hodge on 34 after Mandhana had collected back-to-back boundaries, the game was all but over.Mandhana dispatched Kapp for six over midwicket and continued to attack Jonassen with lofted strokes on the off side to take her for 27 runs off 14 on the night. Even though both openers fell towards the end, Ellyse Perry and Ghosh ensured there were no jitters to seal the eight-wicket win and top the table.

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